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Butternut Squash
I'm growing a plant for the first time. Planted it in
the compost heap (last years!) and it has gone berserk. However whilst I have 3 good sized squashes slowly ripening, many others have seemed to set, start swelling, then go brown and rot from the flower end. Anyone know why this is please? Also, how do you know when they are ripe? -- Roger T 700 ft up in Mid-Wales |
#2
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Butternut Squash
"Roger Tonkin" wrote
I'm growing a plant for the first time. Planted it in the compost heap (last years!) and it has gone berserk. However whilst I have 3 good sized squashes slowly ripening, many others have seemed to set, start swelling, then go brown and rot from the flower end. Anyone know why this is please? Also, how do you know when they are ripe? The flowers were not pollinated, always a problem with one plant as the male and female flowers have to be open at the same time. I just leave them on the plant until either just before the first frost or if the plants dies and then take them up and store in a frost free shed. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#3
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Butternut Squash
On 30/08/2013 23:29, Bob Hobden wrote:
"Roger Tonkin" wrote I'm growing a plant for the first time. Planted it in the compost heap (last years!) and it has gone berserk. However whilst I have 3 good sized squashes slowly ripening, many others have seemed to set, start swelling, then go brown and rot from the flower end. Anyone know why this is please? Also, how do you know when they are ripe? The flowers were not pollinated, always a problem with one plant as the male and female flowers have to be open at the same time. I just leave them on the plant until either just before the first frost or if the plants dies and then take them up and store in a frost free shed. and when you remove them leave the stalk immediately attached to the fruit uncut - cut beyond a joint. The longer they have to ripen the longer they will store for. |
#4
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Butternut Squash
Roger Tonkin wrote:
I'm growing a plant for the first time. Planted it in the compost heap (last years!) and it has gone berserk. However whilst I have 3 good sized squashes slowly ripening, many others have seemed to set, start swelling, then go brown and rot from the flower end. Anyone know why this is please? Don't know, but my courgettes are doign the same this year. Also, how do you know when they are ripe? I've always left them till the plants have died off completely, then left the squash out (turning occasionally) to ripen off in the sun. Same as pumpkins. |
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Butternut Squash
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#6
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Butternut Squash
In article ,
Roger Tonkin wrote: In article , says... I'm growing a plant for the first time. Planted it in the compost heap (last years!) and it has gone berserk. However whilst I have 3 good sized squashes slowly ripening, many others have seemed to set, start swelling, then go brown and rot from the flower end. Anyone know why this is please? Also, how do you know when they are ripe? The flowers were not pollinated, always a problem with one plant as the male and female flowers have to be open at the same time. I just leave them on the plant until either just before the first frost or if the plants dies and then take them up and store in a frost free shed. I wondered if that was the case, but the fruits had started to swell, being about 2-3 inches long and 1 inch wide before starting to rot. Cougettes, which I'm used to, do not do that, hence the question. They do, dearie, they do - as the saying goes. No, I can't explain why, but it also happens for C. maxima (hubbards) and can be caused by at least drought and cold. I think that it's caused by any stress after pollination that is enough to cause the plant to cut back on new fruit to enable the existing ones to mature. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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